Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-v9fdk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-08T09:18:34.774Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Migration, Commerce and Community: the Mīzābīs in Eighteenth-and Nineteenth-Century Algeria*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 January 2009

Donald C. Holsinger
Affiliation:
Northwestern University

Extract

The Mīzāb is an Ibādī community consisting of seven cities clustered in an arid rocky region 350 miles south of Algiers. Having established these settlements nearly a millennium ago, the Mīzābīs, as the inhabitants came to be known, struggled against formidable environmental odds and managed not only to survive but to prosper. By the sixteenth century the Mīzāb had become an important northern Saharan market. During the following centuries, the Maghrib witnessed a remarkable movement of Mīzābī men to coastal cities where they attained prominence in a variety of professions while leaving their roots firmly implanted within their distant oasis community.

Following a brief historical background to settlement in the Mīzāb, this article sketches the ecological constraints of an urban community in a region virtually devoid of resources. It then traces the history of the commercial dispersion to the North during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries and discusses the probable causes of emigration. The Mīzābīs were forced by environmental constraints to seek outside sources of support. Their rise to prominence in the Regency of Algiers may have been related to declining Saharan commerce and new commercial opportunities in the North. The organization and function of Mīzābī corporations in Algiers and other northern cities are described. Finally, this article relates an Ibāçī reform ethic to Mīzābī commercial success and concludes with some reflections on religious ideology and environmental demands as contributing factors to the long-term Mīzābī role in commerce.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1980

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Shaler, William, Sketches of Algiers (Boston, 1826), 88–9.Google Scholar

2 See the numerous works by Lewicki, Tadeusz, in particular his ‘Traits d'histoire du commerce transsaharien: marchands et missionnaires ibadites au Soudan occidental et central au cours des VIII e –XIIe siècles’. Etnografia Polska, viii, 2 (1964), 291311Google Scholar. See also Schacht, J., ‘Sur la diffusion des formes d'architecture religieuse musulmane à travers le Sarara’, Travaux de l'Institut de Recherches Sahariennes, xi (1954), 1127.Google Scholar

3 See Moriaz, Jean, ‘La vie économique du Mzab’, Bulletin de Liaison Saharienne, xi, 39 (1960), 268.Google Scholar

4 Cauvet, G., ‘La culture du palmier dans le Sud algérien’, Bulletin du Comité de l'Afrique Française, Renseignements Coloniaux (1902), 142.Google Scholar

5 Vigourous, L., ‘L'émigration mozabite dans les villes du Tell algérien’, Travaux de l'Institut de Recherches Sahariennes, iii (1945), 87.Google Scholar

6 Brunschvig, Robert, La Berbérie Orientale sous les Hafsides des origines à la fin du XVe siècle (Paris, 1940), 1, 333.Google Scholar

7 d'Aranda, Emanuel, Relation de la captivité du Sieur Emanuel d'Aranda (Paris, 1657), 94–7.Google Scholar

8 Shaw, Thomas, Travels, or Observations relating to several parts of Barbary and the Levant (Oxford, 1738), 86.Google Scholar

9 Féliu, E., Etude sur la Législation des Eaux dans la Chebka du Mzab (Blida, 1908), 130–3.Google Scholar

10 Waterbury, John, North for the Trade (Berkeley, 1972), 41.Google Scholar

11 A. de Motylinski, C., ‘Guerara depuis sa fondation’, Revue Africaine, xxviii (1884), 372–91 and 401–47.Google Scholar

12 Paradis, Venture de, ‘Alger au XVIIIe siècle’, Revue Africaine, xxxix (1895), 278.Google Scholar

13 Paradis, Venture de, Grammaire et Dictionnaire Abrégés de la Langue Berbère (Paris,1844), p. xxi.Google Scholar

14 The most detailed accounts of this legend are found in Mouliéras, Auguste, ‘Les Beni-Isguen’, Bulletin de la Société de Géographie et d'Archéologie de la Province d'Oran, xv (1895), 175–6;Google ScholarDaumas, E., Mœurs et Coutumes de l'Algérie (Paris, 1858), 165–7;Google Scholar and a letter dated 24 June 1835 in Carton F-80557, Archives Nationales, Aix-en-Provence, France.

15 Dubois-Thainville, , ‘Mémoire sur Alger’, in Esquer, G. (ed.), Collection des Documents inédits sur l'histoire de l'Algérie après 1830, second series (Paris, 1927), 133.Google Scholar

16 Esterhazy, Walsin, De la domination Turque dans l'ancienne Régence d'Alger (Paris,1840), 314.Google Scholar

17 Berbrugger, Adrien, Mémoire sur la Peste en Algérie (Sciences Médicales, vol. II), Exploration scientifique de l'Algérie (Paris, 1847), 239.Google Scholar

18 Boutin, ‘Reconnaissance de la ville et des forts d'Alger’, manuscript dated 1808 in the Archives du Ministère de la Guerre, Service Historique de l'Armée, Vincennes. Carton H 374. Dubois-Thainville, , ‘Mémoire sur Alger’, 133.Google Scholar

19 Shaler, William, Sketches of Algiers, 7880.Google Scholar

20 Boyer, Pierre, La Vie quotidienne à Alger à la Veille de l'Intervention française (Paris,1963), 165.Google Scholar

21 Devoulx, A., ‘Tachrifat’, Moniteur Algérien (5 07 1852), 7.Google Scholar

22 Tableau de la Situation des Etablissements Français dans l'Algérie (Paris, 1839), 161.Google Scholar

23 Nationales, Archives, Aix-en-Provence, , France. Carton F-80557. A report entitled ‘Projet d'organisation des Mozabits’ dating from around 1835.Google Scholar

24 Archives Nationales, Aix-en-Provence, France. Carton F-80557, ‘Project d'organisation’. See also Arabic-Turkish Registers, microfilm at the Archives d'Outre-Mer, Aix-en-Provence, France, 15 Mi 14 (vol. 10), 32–8.Google Scholar

25 Archives Nationales, Aix-en-Provence, France. Carton F-80557, ‘Projet d'organisation’.

26 Archives Nationales, Aix-en-Provence, France. Carton F-80557. A letter dated 13 March 1832 addressed to General de Rovigo.

27 Statistics on the barrànī corporations were published in the Tableau de la Situation annually beginning in 1839.

28 For Ibādī doctrine and practice see Lewicki, T., ‘al-Ibādiyya’, Encyclopedia of Islam, iii (1971), 648–60;Google ScholarShinar, Pessah, ‘Ibādiyya and Orthodox Reformism in Modern Algeria’, Scripta Hierosolymitana, Scripta Hierosolymitana (Jerusalem, 1961), 97120Google Scholar; Masqueray, Emile, Chronique d'Abou Zakaria (Algiers, 1879).Google Scholar

29 Shinar, Pessah, ‘Ibādiyya’, 97120Google Scholar. See also Merad, Ali, Le Réformisme Musulman en Algérie de 1925 à 1940 (Paris, 1967).Google Scholar

30 Cuperly, Pierre, ‘Aperçus sur l'histoire de l'Ibādisme au Mzāb’, Mémoire de Maîtrise, Faculté des Lettres de Paris (Sorbonne, 1971), 5.Google Scholar

31 d'Aranda, Emanuel, Relation, 94–7.Google Scholar

32 Shaw, Thomas, Travels, 86.Google Scholar

33 Paradis, Venture de, Grammaire (1844), xxi.Google Scholar

34 Boutin, , ‘Reconnaissance de la ville et des forts d'Alger’, 34.Google Scholar

35 Dubois-Thainville, , ‘Mémoire sur Alger’, 133.Google Scholar

36 Shaler, William, Sketches of Algiers, 89.Google Scholar

37 Shaler, William, Communication on the Language, Manners and Customs of the Berbers or Brebers of Africa (Philadelphia, 1824), p. 16.Google Scholar

38 Masqueray, Emile, Chronique d'Abou Zakaria, LXXVIII.Google Scholar

39 Waterbury, John, ‘Tribalism, Trade and Politics: the Transformation of the Swasa of Morocco’, in Gellner, Ernest and Micaud, Charles (eds.), Arabs and Berbers (London, 1972), 256.Google Scholar

40 See the works by Waterbury on the Swasa. For the Jerbans of Tunisia see Stone, Russell A., ‘Religious Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism in Tunisia’, International Journal of Middle East Studies, v (1974), 260–73.CrossRefGoogle Scholar